Tories: Fighting for the King in America’s First Civil War
Here some websites http://www.blackpast.org/aah/washington-henry-ca-1740-post-1801
http://www.blackloyalist.info/person/display/1485
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/african-americans-many-rivers-to-cross/history/george-washingtons-runaway-slave-harry/
Students will be assigned a side in the American Revolution (the Rebels/Patriots or Loyalists/Tories) and will write a 2-3 page paper from that perspective. Papers will include background information on a specific participant (assigned), primary sources that corroborate that position, and a response to the group exchange work in class. Students will answer a prompt in the paper, follow the rubric and should follow standard paper guidelines and MLA format (including citation and a Works Cited page). Papers will be turned into class and online by the due date. Points will be earned based upon the quality of research, support of arguments, the enthusiasm of approach to the assignment, and quality of work.
Initial Research:
Who, How, What (you already know what side, when, and where this took place)
Gather what information you can about your specific participant or if not that participant, then someone who was on the same side. Access the attached sources for your information or sources from the Library (not Wikipedia). Once you understand who your participant was, then work on how s/he participated in the Revolution, and why s/he took that particular side. Be sure to cite this information.
Primary Sources:
Begin locating primary source material (a minimum of two) about the side of the Revolution that s/he would support. You are looking for sources that may have either swayed your participant to a specific side or with which your participant would have been in agreement. You can use any of the documents from the textbooks or the approved sources (attached). Explain the significance of the source to your cause and be sure to cover how the primary source supports your argument for this side. You should include at least one quote from each source (cite all sources and quotes).
Response:
Students will need to come to class with a representation of their participant (copied from the internet or drawn) and display it for the other students. Students will join together with those of like-minds to share information and solidify arguments. Then students will be paired off with participants of the opposing side and have to make a case for why her/his side is more valid and in the best interest of Colonial America.
Paper:
Take all of this information into account and write your paper. It should include some background information on the participant (or type of participant), the justification for the side taken, sources that support this viewpoint, and then a response about what it was like to both join with those of the same opinion and confront someone from the opposing side. Your conclusion will take into account all that you have learned from your research and from your face-to-face encounters.
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Prompt:
Initially, your paper is a justification for why your participant chose to join the Revolutionaries or the Loyalists. After your response, answer these questions in your conclusion – what did you learn about the American Revolution that you didn’t know at the start of your research? What did you learn from others who shared your opinions? What did you learn from the opposition and did anything s/he said sway your viewpoint?
________________________________________________________________________ 10/06/17
The American Revolution Paper Websites (can use hyperlinks from Canvas-Assignments)
Campus Library – on ground or libguides (see website)
http://www.besthistorysites.net/index.php/general-resources (Links to an external site.) – links to multiple sites
General
National Humanities Center – America in Class
http://americainclass.org/sources/makingrevolution/index.htm (Links to an external site.)
This is good for general info and primary sources.
Bostonian Society – The Old State House
http://www.revolutionarycharacters.org/ (Links to an external site.)
ConstitutionFacts.com
http://www.constitutionfacts.com/us-declaration-of-independence/ (Links to an external site.)
Use the menu on the left to learn about specific groups or people
U.S. History.org
http://www.ushistory.org/us/ (Links to an external site.)
This is a general history site, but concentrate on those chapters on the American Revolution topics (#s 9-13).
Digital History
http://www.digitalhistory.uh.edu/era.cfm?eraID=3 (Links to an external site.)
Great source for finding specific people (by type or name) and primary sources.
American Revolution
http://www.americanrevolution.org/archives.php (Links to an external site.)
This is a good site for finding a person or for info on Native or African American participants.
History Matters
http://historymatters.gmu.edu/search.php?function=find (Links to an external site.)
You can type in your topic to narrow the search (particularly if you type “Patriot” or “Loyalist”).
Our American Revolution (from Colonial Williamsburg)
http://www.ouramericanrevolution.org/index.cfm/page/view/m0001 (Links to an external site.)
Some of the specifics are useful (not the best general site)
Information on African Americans and Revolution:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part2/2narr4.html (Links to an external site.) – or –
http://www.blackpast.org/entries-categories/american-revolution (Links to an external site.)
Loyalists:
The Online Institute for Advanced Loyalist Studies
http://www.royalprovincial.com/index.htm (Links to an external site.)
General info or scroll down to the section with a link to Black Loyalists, Indian Loyalists, or women.
Tories: Fighting for the King in America’s First Civil War
http://www.toriesfightingfortheking.com/ToryArmy.htm (Links to an external site.)
Here you’ll find all manner of information on bands of Loyalists and individuals
New York Loyalists:
http://www.nyhistory.net/drums/kingsmen.htm (Links to an external site.)
Info and links to NY participants inlcuding Loyalist Indians
For those of you researching Black Loyalists:
The Nova Scotia Museum – http://novascotia.ca/museum/blackloyalists/recovering.htm (Links to an external site.)\
…………………..Answer preview………………………….
Henry Washington was slave born in Senegambia (the present day Senegal and Zambia) at around 1740. At his youth age, he was transported to America as a slave together with many other Africans. In 1763 George Washington bought him as a slave t work on a project for draining Virginia`s Great Dismal Swamp. After working and completing this project, he was later moved to Mount Vernon in 1766 where he was in charge…………………….
APA
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